TALLAHASSEE – If elected governor, Chris King said Tuesday, he would fight to outlaw capital punishment and refuse to sign death warrants.

An underdog candidate in a crowded primary with three other Democrats, King of Winter Park released his plans to end the death penalty as part of a broader set of criminal justice reforms.

As governor, King said he will seek to repeal the death penalty legislatively and work with Cabinet members to commute death sentences to life in prison. Both options would likely face fierce resistance in a GOP-dominated Legislature and a Cabinet that has had one Democratic member in 20 years.

But King also said he would refuse to sign death warrants – essentially putting a moratorium on capital punishment in Florida as long as he held office.

Other criminal justice reform proposals proposed by King include legalizing marijuana, setting a goal of reducing incarceration rates by 50 percent in 10 years by eliminating mandatory minimums for non-violent offenders, ending contracts with private prison companies and putting more money toward education and criminal justice programs.

“Florida needs fresh ideas and new leadership to reform its broken criminal justice system,” King said. “‘Turning the tide’ means reforming a system that needlessly criminalizes tens of thousands of nonviolent men and women in Florida. I reject the conventional politics of just seeking incremental change –– we’ve got to fight for bold, progressive ideas to make our justice system fair while keeping Floridians safe.”

Despite support among Gov. Rick Scott and fellow Republican legislative leaders, the politics of the death penalty has undergone a significant shift in the past two years.

In January 2016 the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that Florida’s capital punishment laws, which allowed a judge to make the final sentence upon the recommendation of a jury, were unconstitutional. The decision sent the case back to the Florida Supreme Court, which found in October 2016 that a unanimous jury was required to issue a death sentence.

The murky status put a de facto moratorium on capital punishment while the case made its way through the courts. Still, Scott has signed 27 death warrants, the most of any Florida governor since the death penalty was reinstated in 1976, including four since the October 2016 ruling.

The group "Conservatives on the RIght Side of Equality" is hosting an event in Orlando Tuesday to stress that "the equal treatment of every American, including LGBT people, is a long-held conservative value."

The group "Conservatives on the RIght Side of Equality" is hosting an event in Orlando Tuesday to stress that "the equal treatment of every American, including LGBT people, is a long-held conservative value."

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A New York congressional candidate said her successful bid to use campaign funds for childcare costs is a game changer in politics.

A New York congressional candidate said her successful bid to use campaign funds for childcare costs is a game changer in politics.